Tuesday, December 23, 2008

"Once you violate such trust it takes years to re-earn it, if you ever can."

I tend to find this kind of post worrisome, but I have to mention it. From the Guardian:

"Richard Silverstein

Frankly, I don't know quite what to make of Bernard Madoff, the $50bn man. When you hear the term "Ponzi scheme" you think of words like con artist, financial predator, flim flam artist, trickster. While I don't know Madoff personally or understand the ins and outs of his financial operation, somehow I can't see him in these terms. I don't see him as Michael Milken, Ivan Boesky or Alberto Vilar, a bottom-feeder out to help himself to whatever he can get.

Frankly, while it was a convenient foil for Madoff's work to be a wealthy New York Jewish philanthropist, I don't see him as a poseur in this. While he has destroyed lives and done great harm to American Jewish philanthropy, he has also wiped out the fortunes of his own children and other close relatives, and probably guaranteed himself a prison term. His is a family and tribal tragedy.

I couldn't begin to speculate about what drew him into this fraud – whether it was willful connivance and greed or merely a desire to help friends, family and fellow Jews to improve their investment returns or some combination. It somehow seems more complicated that the typical Wall Street Gekko-like scam. Gershom Gorenberg speculates:

Why did Madoff do it? My guess is that the start he was making profits legally. People admired him for it, and wanted to belong to his country club. When he had a bad month, he got embarrassed, like a smart kid who doesn't want to admit he got a bad report card. So he faked good results, figuring he'd cover the loss later. ... Eventually, faking became his full-time business. I'd feel sorry for him, if I wasn't busy feeling sorry for the rest of us.

Madoff has done incalculable harm to everyone he has touched, from international banking giants to small Jewish foundations to synagogues and Jewish federations. The Jerusalem Post calculates that he has destroyed $600m in Jewish charitable funds (not including personal losses to investors who used these funds for their own Jewish charitable giving) with the possibility it could reach as high as $1.5bn. The Post quotes sources who estimate a possible 20% reduction in funding for Jewish federations around the country.

American Jewish historian, Jonathan Sarna, puts the catastrophe in a broader Jewish philanthropic context:

The Madoff crisis marked an unprecedented loss to the "Jewish economy" – the networks of Jewish institutions, donors and charities that include universities, schools, hospitals and community centers, agreed … Sarna.

"I know of nothing [in history] on this scale"….

Sarna predicted that the wholesale destruction of fortunes and endowments would prove to be a turning point in American Jewish institutional life. … "The reduction of billions ... in the Jewish economy means that there is just not going to be enough money to sustain all the institutions and initiatives that have been created." ...

"We will be a poorer ... for that. What's been wiped out is an infrastructure that was particularly important in sustaining these institutions. The people who were invested with Madoff were the generation that not only supported institutions like Yeshiva University or the Holocaust museums, but that created them," Sarna said.( I HAVE NO IDEA IF THIS IS TRUE. IT SEEMS OVERDONE, BUT HE KNOWS MORE THAN I DO )

The list of specifically Jewish clients reads like a virtual who's who of American Jewry. According to the New York Times and other sources, Hadassah lost $90m, Mortimer Zuckerman's charitable foundation lost $30-40m, Yeshiva University lost $100-125m, Israel's Technion lost $6m, the Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles lost $25.5m, Washington DC's Jewish federation lost $10m, Manhattan's Ramaz Jewish day school lost $6m, the American Jewish Congress lost two-thirds of its approximately $17m endowment, Elie Wiesel's charitable foundation lost $37m and one of Steven Spielberg's foundations lost a considerable portion of its $12m in assets.( A LOT OF HIS VICTIMS WERE JEWISH. YES. )

While individually these amounts don't seem like a lot of money in a world in which we're talking about $700bn bail-outs (or Banco Santander's $3bn exposure to Madoff's meltdown), remember that these sums are everything or most everything these charities had. Many will be forced to drastically curtail their services or reduce staff. All of which hurts the deserving beneficiaries of these groups: teachers, students, the elderly, the homeless, cancer victims, etc.

Apparently, Madoff had close personal and financial relationships with Jewish members of the Palm Beach Country Club. One of the members who helped introduce fellow members to Madoff, Carl Shapiro, lost $145m from his own personal foundation. The Lappin Foundation in Boston and the Chais Foundation in Los Angeles have closed their doors, since their entire endowments were invested with Madoff. And these are only the ones we know. Imagine how many other clients we don't yet know about.

The harm done is not just in the financial losses. Think what a devastating blow this will be to organisations that cherished the trust their donors placed in them to invest their gifts wisely. Once you violate such trust it takes years to re-earn it, if you ever can.

I know this because I spent 17-years as a non-profit fundraiser, many of them working for Jewish communal groups, including two federations. Jewish charities pride themselves on the sober, judicious, conservative approach that they take to the funds they raise. These funds are considered a sacred trust, since tzedakah ("justice giving") is one of the highest values in Jewish tradition.

One of the things you learn both as a fundraiser and ordinary investor is to diversify your portfolio( VERY WISE ). Never rely on a single donor, never rely on a single investment vehicle, never rely on a single investment company. Otherwise, you run the risk of destroying your project if there is a financial cataclysm. Financial advisers often tell their clients never to have more than 5% of their assets invested in a single company's stock or with a single broker. It boggles the mind as important an American Jewish organisation as Hadassah would invest $90m with a single trader or that the small Lappin Foundation could invest its entire $7m endowment with Madoff.

What would cause otherwise prudent people, some with sophisticated understanding of finance, to override these concerns and throw caution to the wind? The Los Angeles Times calls it an "affinity scam". In other words, Madoff relied on the Jewish community, in an almost tribal way, to support his financial scheme( THESE HAPPENED TO BE THE PEOPLE HE KNEW ). There does seem to be some sort of almost atavistic instinct at work that led many of these individuals to trust Madoff with all their worldly assets( HOW ABOUT FRIENDSHIP AND TRUST? ). Perhaps they saw Bernie as one of their own, a smart Jewish boy who would take care of them. Some might have felt that in handling their own money, they needed someone who was more than just a distant banker, someone who they could trust as a member of the tribe.( TOO MUCH. HE PREYED ON THE PEOPLE HE WAS CLOSE TO AND WHO TRUSTED HIM. HE HAPPENED TO BE JEWISH AND KNEW A LOT OF OTHER JEWS. )

This is yet another indication of the damage done by Madoff. Perhaps it is wise not to trust someone just because they seem to get good investment returns and share your religious affiliation. But in the days before the Madoff affair, days which seem innocent and faraway though they were just last month, it was a comforting thought that you could do so. Now, it seems a harsher, less trusting, more atomised world in which you can't trust your fellow country club member, your fellow synagogue member, your fellow federation donor, your fellow board member to do the right thing by you or your charity. In the rest of the world, maybe nothing is sacred. But in the Jewish world some things were until Bernie Madoff came along."( THERE STILL IS A BOND BETWEEN MANY JEWS BASED ON A SHARED RELIGION, TRADITIONS, VALUES, ETC. )

Frankly, this article isn't what caught my eye. I read it, but felt no need to post on it. However, as usual, the comments are littered ( my word ) with Jew Haters. That's what caught my attention. An unbelievable number of the comments have been deleted, and, in my opinion, many of the remaining comments are by Jew Haters. I can no longer read Haaretz comments because every Jew hater on the planet who can write a basic English sentence posts on it.

I'd print them, but I don't allow such filth on my blog.

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